The City of London is the financial and commercial core, where money, contracts, and decisions shape the entire system. It operates as the centre of control for trade and capital, influencing every district without needing visibility.
The City formed as the original centre of London, growing from trade and governance into a financial powerhouse. Over time, it evolved into a specialised district focused on commerce, banking, and structured decision-making.
The area is highly structured and stable, operating with precision and consistency. It is efficient, controlled, and central to the functioning of the wider city and empire.
Predominantly middle and upper-middle class professionals
Strong presence of merchants, bankers, and officials
English dominant with some European professionals
Adult working population
Male majority
Class tolerance: low (clear hierarchy)
Racism: moderate (status-based filtering)
Openness: restricted, access-based
Strong formal authority presence
Highly regulated environment
Minimal informal control
Area feels controlled and disciplined
Primary Economic Drivers
banking and finance
trade agreements and contracts
large-scale capital movement
Type of Work Available
skilled and professional roles
structured and stable
limited low-skill opportunities
Income Structure
regular salaries and structured pay
high stability compared to other districts
Wealth Distribution
moderate to high
wealth often controlled rather than displayed
Economic Mobility
limited access
advancement tied to connections and skill
Dependency
central node, others depend on it
Crime level: low to medium
Types: financial manipulation, fraud
Visibility: low and controlled
A typical day is highly structured, with movement centred around offices, meetings, and transactions. People move with purpose, maintaining routine and efficiency. The area feels controlled and focused.
Day: highly active, organised, business-focused
Night: significantly quieter, reduced presence
Dress: formal, clean, professional
Language: precise, controlled, formal
Behaviour: disciplined, calculated, reserved
Pubs: controlled, professional atmosphere
Gatherings: business-focused
Entertainment: limited, structured
West London (elite): respected and necessary
Central (City/Soho): core of power
East (working/industrial): source of control
South (lower class): distant and unreachable
Aristocrat / Royal:
→ acceptable, but not dominant here
Wealthy outsider:
→ accepted if relevant
Middle class / professional:
→ expected and normal
Working class (from other districts):
→ out of place unless employed